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#3 | ||||||
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The bore diameter stamps may indicate that the gun was not made with those bore diameters. I'm sure you have measured the wall thickness out of curiousity if nothing else.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Bill Murphy For Your Post: |
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#4 | |||||||
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The bores looked clean when viewing but when I pushed the clean patch with "Hoppes" through the bores there was certainly evidence of black spent powder indicating the gun had been fired. Fired with what is an unknown. I wanted to contact the previous owner but the shop where I purchased it was reluctant to share the information. |
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#5 | ||||||
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The 20 marked on both barrels was the standard way they marked bore diameters at the first Birmingham proof. That would put them at .615" diameter at that time. Tf they were originally .626" it would have had 19 bore stamped there. Bores that are .010" over size compared to the original would put them out of proof. The .626" and .630" would mean both were out of proof which is why they had to do the reproof. Having the bore diameter marked in thousandth of an inch was standard in 1989. It looks like the barrels were cleaned up followed by a single second proof.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Bob Brown For Your Post: |
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#6 | ||||||
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The chamber is still 2.5". An unfired 2-3/4" Federal will chamber, however a fired identical case will not. If the MWT is sufficient, the "Cheddite" 20 gauge 65mm or 67mm 2-1/2" case with a roll crimp and a low pressure 7/8 oz. load would be ideal.
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